It was intended as a simple
gesture of solidarity with Muslim women who have become an easy target
for our nation's anger these days: What if women from every race, religion
and nationality went about their daily routines with their heads covered
in the traditional scarves that many Muslim women wear?

But when Washington, D.C., student
Jennifer Schock posted her idea on the message board of a women's media
group, she was stunned by the firestorm of controversy it generated.

"Some people said the idea was ridiculous,
that I should be finding more constructive ways of spending my time," said
Schock, 31. Others criticized her for embracing a tradition that is viewed
by many as a symbol of Islam's oppression of women. "It was supposed to
be this very simple way ... to reach out to Muslim women, to tell them,
'You don't have to be alone.' No rally, no vigil, nothing political about
it," she said. "Just a way to challenge our perceptions and foster some
kind of dialogue with the people we encounter in our everyday lives.

"Instead, all of a sudden, I'm endorsing
the oppression of women. It made me realize just how emotional this whole
thing is."

While "Arab-looking" men are being
profiled as possible terrorists, Muslim women in traditional dress have
also felt the heat of a suspicious nation.

"I have talked to so many women who
are afraid, who have not been out of their homes because they don't feel
safe," says Khalid Iqbal of the national Council on American Islamic Relations
in Washington, D.C.

Amid news accounts of sporadic violence
aimed at Muslims, fears abound. Reports have come in from mosques and Muslim
organizations across the country, including in Los Angeles, of women being
harassed, having their scarves yanked from their heads, he said. "Some
sisters have heard that at some colleges and schools, young people have
tried to light the tips of the scarves with a match, to set them on fire."

The scarves, called hijab , are worn
by many girls once they pass puberty, as part of Islam's dictates requiring
women to dress modestly. Not all Muslim women wear them; it is not explicitly
required by the Koran, and some say there has been a misplaced emphasis
on the scarf as a marker of personal piety and religious devotion.

The hijab is worn wrapped around
the head to cover all the hair, and tied under the chin, with a corner
hanging down the back. Women wearing the hijab must adhere to other rules
of modesty, such as keeping their arms and legs covered in public.

"The West looks at the scarf as a
sign that Muslim women are oppressed," Iqbal said. "But Muslim women see
it as a sign of dignity that shows respect for their religion and elicits
respect from men."

But in the aftermath of the terrorist
attacks, the hijab has also become associated with the notion of terrorism
in the eyes of some angry Americans. "We have had to suggest that women
don't go out at night, that they stay in safe, public places and have a
cell phone ready to call for help," Iqbal said. And he recommends that
women change the way they secure the hijab --"maybe with a pin that will
break loose when pulled, rather than a knot"--because some women have been
injured when strangers yanked on their scarves. "One woman was literally
dragged" and almost strangled when someone tried to pull off her scarf,
Iqbal said.

Schock consulted Iqbal and visited
several Washington-area mosques before proposing her solidarity campaign.
"I didn't want to insult anyone, or make their lives any more difficult
than they already are," she said. Iqbal--who has been on the front lines
of efforts to calm American attitudes toward Muslims since the attacks--said
he was moved to tears by her idea. "Such good wishes ....What can I say?
I usually don't get emotional, but I did in this case. It is such a beautiful
thing."

And Schock says she has been moved
by the expressions of gratitude she has received from Muslim women who
learned of her campaign. "I've gotten so many calls saying, 'Thank you,
thank you.' It's such a little thing, but they have been so grateful."

Schock has no idea how many women
have taken part in her campaign. She heard from about 50 women--mostly
in the Washington, D.C., area--who said they planned to don scarves for
a day. And calls and e-mails are coming in from women in other parts of
the nation who are trying to organize similar efforts through their churches,
community groups, even PTAs.

Schock wore her scarf for one day
last week, and though she felt self-conscious about her appearance, no
one she encountered was unkind. "I took the train in [from Fairfax, Va.]
to D.C. and it was packed, and a lot of people seemed to go out of their
way to be nice."

Administrators at the college she
attends--presuming that she was Muslim--approached her to thank her for
having the courage to come to class. "Someone on the train asked if I spoke
Arabic. And one person asked me what Jewish holiday it is."

And if the sight of a fair-skinned
woman in Muslim dress confused and challenged some, the experience changed
Schock as well. She grew up in a Missouri town so small that it has only
one-third as many residents as the number of people who died in the World
Trade Center. "Growing up, I didn't know anyone who wasn't white and European,
until I went off to college."

This experience, she says, "opened
my eyes to what it feels like to be different, to feel out of place in
your own country."